Authors: Philip Roth
LEGAL COACH:
You see, you mustn't be frightened
of Boy Scouts, Mr. President. Of course they're
going to bleed a little and there may even be this
hue and cry about it on TV, but when the country
sees this sign that one of them was carrying before
the bleeding began (extracts from
his
briefcase a
sign
reading DIXON FAVORS EFFING- The
Reverend
gasps),
I think our worries are going to
be over. Let the newspapers run all the photos of
Boy Scout corpses they want-we'll just run a photo
of this sign, and of the five thousand replicas that I
have asked the Government Printing Office to run
off by morning. We'll see who gets the support of
the nation then.
TRICKY:
Look! I've stopped sweating!
LEGAL COACH:
See? You've weathered another crisis,
Mr. President.
TRICKY:
Wow! That makes six hundred and one!
(Congratulations all around, from everyone except
the Highbrow Coach, who speaks now for
the
first
time)
HIGHBROW COACH:
Gentlemen, I wonder if I may
take a somewhat different approach to the problem
that we have been assembled here to
TRICKY HAS ANOTHER CRISIS
51
solve. All the while I have been listening to your
suggestions, I have simultaneously been bringing to
bear upon the problem all my brainpower, wisdom,
academic credentials, cunning, opportunism, love of
power and so on, and the result is this list that I am
holding in my hand, of the names of five individuals
and/or organizations upon whom I think we can
safely-if I may use the vernacular for a moment-pin
the rap.
LEGAL
COACH
(his interest
suddenly aroused,
after
initial suspiciousness
of "the Professor"): The
rap?
HIGHBROW COACH:
"The rap."
LEGAL COACH:
Which rap?
HIGHBROW COACH:
You name it. Inciting to
riot. Tampering with the morals of minors. If you
prefer, corrupting the youth of the nation.
POLITICAL COACH:
"Corrupting the youth."
Hey, that's got a real campaign ring to it!
HIGHBROW
COACH:
And a certain historical resonance, I would
think.
SPIRITUAL COACH:
At the risk of sounding "square,"
may I put in a good word for "tampering with the
morals of minors"? I've always found it to have
tremendous appeal. It seems there is something in
the word "tampering" that particularly infuriates
people.
LEGAL COACH:
That may be, Reverend, but
in
my book you still can't beat "inciting to riot" for
scaring the hell out of the public.
52 OUR GANG
TRICKY:
'And you, General? You look distressed
again.
MILITARY COACH:
I am distressed again! I am
distressed every time the Professor opens his
mouth! What is this business of bringing charges?
Oh, mind you, they're good charges and I don't
have anything against them personally, but the last
thing I remember we were talking about shooting
the bastards.
HIGHBROW COACH:
General, despite your low
opinion of intellectuals, I happen to have the
highest regard for Army officers such as yourself,
particularly in their devotion to their men and to
their country. I wonder if once you have heard me
read my list, you won't agree that to charge any of
these five self-avowed enemies of America with the
crime, to fix the responsibility for the uprising of
the Boy Scouts on any one of them, will
simultaneously absolve the Boy Scouts themselves
of any real guilt, while totally discrediting the
charges they have made against the President. The
Scouts will retreat in panic...
MILITARY COACH:
But without our firing a shot!
HIGHBROW COACH:
The country isn't going away,
General.
TRICKY:
Sounds interesting, Professor. But why only
one of the five? That strikes me as highly unusual.
HIGHBROW COACH:
Well, perhaps, but I was
TRICKY HAS ANOTHER CRISIS
53
just wondering if we haven't gone the route with
the conspiracy business.
TRICKY:
Oh, but it's so much fun when you get to
choose two or three. Each person picks his
favorites-and then all the wheeling and dealing,
until we come up with the conspiracy that suits
everybody.
LEGAL COACH:
And, of course, Mr. President, to
put in a word here in behalf of the cause of justice,
the more choice you're allowed, the greater the
chance of catching the right culprit. My feeling is
that just to stay on the safe side, each of us should
choose a minimum of three.
SPIRITUAL COACH:
I know I'm outside my baili
wick again, but if it is going to improve the chances
for justice being done, why can't we choose all five?
MILITARY COACH:
Mr. President, I am growing
more and more exasperated by the moment. Here
we sit, in the comfort and spendor of this fully
equipped underground locker room, in full football
regalia, deliberating over the niceties of justice,
while, with every passing moment, those Boy
Scouts are readying themselves for battle against
my men. I think it is high time we reminded the
Professor that he is no longer up there in his ivory
tower, where you can talk yourself blue in the face
about this one's rights and that one's rights and
how many rights fit on
the head of a pin. There is an angry mob of Boy
54
OUR GANG
Scouts out there, Eagle Scouts among them, and
they are growing angrier and more threatening by
the moment. I say shoot 'em and shoot 'em now!
TRICKY:
General, you are a brave soldier and a loyal
American. But, I must say, I sense in your remarks a
certain disregard for fundamental constitutional
liberties such as I have pledged myself to uphold in
my oath of office.
MILITARY
COACH:
Mr. President, I have the highest
regard for the Constitution. If I didn't, I wouldn't
have devoted my life to fighting to defend it. But
the fact of the matter is, we are playing with a time
bomb. Right now it is still only the Boy Scouts. By
morning, and I can guarantee you this, their ranks
are going to be infiltrated by dissolute Brownies and
Cub Scouts looking for adventure. Now it's one
thing to ask my men to mow down Eagle Scouts; it
is another for them to have to deal with little boys
and girls half that size. Those kids can run like the
dickens, and they're small. As a result, what right
now would still be a routine street massacre, will be
converted into dangerous house-tohouse fighting, in
which we are bound to sustain heavy losses by way
of our soldiers shooting mistakenly at each other.
TRICKY:
I think you know, General, that nobody
wants to save the lives of our boys-b
y
that I mean,
of course, our men-any more than I do.
TRICKY HAS ANOTHER CRISIS
55
But I repeat: I will not do so by trampling upon the
Constitution. I campaigned for this office as a strict
constructionist where the Constitution of this
country is concerned, and if I were now to take the
course that you suggest and acted to prevent this
group from voting in open and honest elections on
the Professor's list, then the American people would
have every right to throw me out of office
tomorrow.
And let me make one thing perfectly clear:
nobody is ever going to do that again. They have
thrown me out of office enough in my lifetime! I
will not be cast in the role of a loser-of a war, or of
anything. And if that means bringing the full
firepower of our Armed Forces to bear upon every,
last Brownie and Cub Scout in America, then that is
what we are going to do. Because the President of
the United States and Leader of the Free World can
ill-afford to be humiliated by anyone, let alone by
third- and fourth-graders who have nothing better
to do than engage the United States Army in
treacherous house-to-house combat. I don't care if
we have to go ,into the nursery schools. I don't care
if our men have to fight their way through
barricades constructed of lanyards and hula hoops
and bubble gum, under a steady barrage of toys
being grossly misused as weapons-I, as
Commander-in-Chief, will not run from the battle.
Not when my prestige is at stake! If I have to call in
air strikes
56
OUR GANG
over the playgrounds, I will do it! Let's see them try
to bring down B-52's with their bats and their balls!
Let's see them try to flee from my helicopters on
those little tricycles of theirs! No, this mighty giant
of a nation of which I am, by extension, the mighty
giant of a President, will not have its nose tweaked
by a bunch of little brats who should be at home
with their homework in the first place!
(All applaud)
Now, as to the voting. Since I am a decisive man,
as you can see from my book Six Hundred Crises, I
am now going to decide how many of these five
enemies of America each of you will be allowed to
choose to charge with the crime. Of course, we still
have to decide which of the three crimes that the
Professor mentioned we're going to use, but in that
it is getting on to morning, perhaps we can put that
off to a later date. In the meantime, we will come to
a decision as to who is guilty. (Impish endearing
smile) That's the best part, anyway!
Now (back to serious business), we will proceed
in the following manner: the Professor will read his
list, and each person present will select as many as
he wants, up to three ... No, two .. . No, three ...
Uh-oh, my lip's sweating-uh-oh, I think I'm having
another crisis! Two! Two! Say two!
TRICKY HAS ANOTHER CRISIS
57
POLITICAL COACH:
Good going, Mr. President
you've weathered it!
TRICKY:
Wow! That makes six hundred and two
crises! Wait'll I tell the girls what Daddy did!
LEGAL
COACH:
Mr. President, in that we are to be allowed